Dutch journalists face German trial for Nazi interview
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                  World Jewish News

                  Dutch journalists face German trial for Nazi interview

                  Former SS Heinrich Boere began a life sentence in December for shooting dead three civilians in Nazi-occupied Netherlands in 1944.

                  Dutch journalists face German trial for Nazi interview

                  23.01.2012, Holocaust

                  Two Dutch journalists accused of secretly filming an interview with a 90-year-old former SS assassin will stand trial next month on charges of breaching German privacy laws, a court said.
                  The two journalists, from Dutch current affairs programme Een Vandaag, stand accused of recording the interview with Heinrich Boere using a hidden camera when he was in a nursing home in Eschweiler, western Germany.
                  A spokesman for the regional court in nearby Aachen told AFP that the trial should begin on February 9 in Eschweiler.
                  "They could face three years in jail for revealing a conversation that should have remained private," the spokesman added.
                  Boere began a life sentence in December for shooting dead three civilians in Nazi-occupied Netherlands in 1944.
                  He confessed to shooting in cold blood pharmacist Fritz Bicknese, bicycle shop owner Teunis de Groot and Frans-Willem Kusters.
                  But he argued that as a member of an SS commando unit tasked with killing suspected resistance members or supporters, he risked being sent to a concentration camp if he refused.
                  An expert had declared Boere -- who suffers from heart problems and is wheelchair-bound -- fit enough to begin his term provided certain medical care was provided.

                  EJP